On the Performance and Cost of Cloud-Assisted Multi-path Bulk Data Transfer

Author(s):  
Kyuho Jeong ◽  
Renato Figueiredo ◽  
Kohei Ichikawa
Author(s):  
Kurmachalam Ajay Kumar ◽  
Saritha Vemuri ◽  
Ralla Suresh

High speed bulk data transfer is an important part of many data-intensive scientific applications. TCP fails for the transfer of large amounts of data over long distance across high-speed dedicated network links. Due to system hardware is incapable of saturating the bandwidths supported by the network and rise buffer overflow and packet-loss in the system. To overcome this there is a necessity to build a Performance Adaptive-UDP (PA-UDP) protocol for dynamically maximizing the implementation under different systems. A mathematical model and algorithms are used for effective buffer and CPU management. Performance Adaptive-UDP is a supreme protocol than other protocols by maintaining memory processing, packetloss processing and CPU utilization. Based on this protocol bulk data transfer is processed with high speed over the dedicated network links.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (21) ◽  
pp. 4541
Author(s):  
Syed Asif Raza Shah ◽  
Seo-Young Noh

Large scientific experimental facilities currently are generating a tremendous amount of data. In recent years, the significant growth of scientific data analysis has been observed across scientific research centers. Scientific experimental facilities are producing an unprecedented amount of data and facing new challenges to transfer the large data sets across multi continents. In particular, these days the data transfer is playing an important role in new scientific discoveries. The performance of distributed scientific environment is highly dependent on high-performance, adaptive, and robust network service infrastructures. To support large scale data transfer for extreme-scale distributed science, there is the need of high performance, scalable, end-to-end, and programmable networks that enable scientific applications to use the networks efficiently. We worked on the AmoebaNet solution to address the problems of a dynamic programmable network for bulk data transfer in extreme-scale distributed science environments. A major goal of the AmoebaNet project is to apply software-defined networking (SDN) technology to provide “Application-aware” network to facilitate bulk data transfer. We have prototyped AmoebaNet’s SDN-enabled network service that allows application to dynamically program the networks at run-time for bulk data transfers. In this paper, we evaluated AmoebaNet solution with real world test cases and shown that how it efficiently and dynamically can use the networks for bulk data transfer in large-scale scientific environments.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean Pennefather ◽  
Karen Bradshaw ◽  
Barry Irwin

We present the design and implementation of an indirect messaging extension for the existing NFComms framework that provides communication between a network flow processor and host CPU. This extension addresses the bulk throughput limitations of the framework and is intended to work in conjunction with existing communication mediums. Testing of the framework extensions shows an increase in throughput performance of up to 268x that of the current direct message passing framework at the cost of increased single message latency of up to 2x. This trade-off is considered acceptable as the proposed extensions are intended for bulk data transfer only while the existing message passing functionality of the framework is preserved and can be used in situations where low latency is required for small messages.


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